The Day

Abusing the privilege: A group is closing one entrance to an East Lyme nature preserve because visitors are misbehavin­g.

Visitors to East Lyme site abusing trails, trespassin­g on nearby private land

- By MARY BIEKERT Day Staff Writer East Lyme m.biekert@theday.com

— The Friends of the Oswegatchi­e Hills Nature Preserve has permanentl­y closed the Quarry Dock Road entrance after caretakers said visitors have been using the entrance area to congregate and then trespass on an abutting private property and also have been mistreatin­g nearby trails.

While caretakers said such activity does occur every year and they’ve made efforts to mitigate the issues by posting private property signs where that property begins, Kris Lambert, the president of the Friends of the Oswegatchi­e Hills Nature Preserve — a coalition of volunteers that oversees and maintains the site — said she believes issues of people mistreatin­g trails and surroundin­g property have significan­tly worsened this year as a result of people being shut indoors due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We saw a huge, huge surge of people coming into the (preserve) once the pandemic began,” Lambert said by phone Monday. Since April, she said she has had to print about 1,000 trail maps.

With more people on the trails, there also have been more issues of trail damage and mistreatme­nt, said Friends of Oswegatchi­e Hills member and former president Greg Decker, who lives on the road leading up the trail’s main entrance on Memorial Park Drive and who helps maintain the trails. He said the trail damage that’s occurred since mid-March has not only put strain on the handful of volunteers who are trying to maintain the seven miles of trails over the 457 acres that make up the preserve, but places the environmen­t at risk and negatively impacted neighbors.

“It is a hidden gem in town. It is a real unique property and our goal is to protect it,” Decker said by phone Monday. “We call it a nature preserve and not a recreation area. And that’s the problem we are having. People see it as a recreation area and they treat it as such without considerat­ion to the ecosystem, the plants and the wildlife. We did normally see some damage with the regular hikers before it became popular, but the percentage of (damage now) has increased a lot.”

Decker described dogs running around off leashes; an unleashed dog attack that took off a leashed dog’s ear; damage to saplings and dead wood, which he said are essential to maintain bird habitats; litter left on the trails, including dog waste and dog waste bags; trail damage due to mountain bikers using the land after heavy rains; hand-painted trail signs being stolen; and signs of campfires on the trails, which Decker said is especially dangerous, as a forest fire could completely decimate the property.

In particular, Decker said the Quarry Dock Road entrance, which is not the preserve’s main entrance, has seen its fair share of problems this year, upsetting nearby neighbors who live on the narrow, dead-end road. He described visitors parking in the area and congregati­ng before then walking through the preserve to cross over onto private property owned by developer Glenn Russo to reach Turkey Point, a popular swimming area along the Niantic River.

Lambert said as a result of the increased activity on Quarry Dock Road, she and the Friends of Oswegatchi­e Hills, as well as town officials, unanimousl­y felt it was best to permanentl­y close the entrance and have since placed boulders around the parking area to prevent cars from parking there. The Friends of Oswegatchi­e Hills also are reprinting trail maps to not include informatio­n about the former entrance area.

“It’s too bad we had to do it, but it needed to be done,” Lambert said. “We are sorry, but we don’t want negative impacts on the neighbors. We decided it was time.”

The main entrance to the Oswegatchi­e Hills on Memorial Park Drive will remain open, and Decker said he hopes hikers will be more mindful of the trails and will make efforts to follow preserve trail rules, which include keeping dogs leashed, not starting fires and not littering.

“Generation­s of people growing up in the town have played up there and recreated and feel it is part of their heritage to go up and do what they want, but they don’t realize the consequenc­es to their actions,” Decker said. “We don’t want to deter anyone from going out and enjoying the environmen­t, but we want to promote respecting it and responsibl­e use of the land.”

“It is a hidden gem in town. It is a real unique property and our goal is to protect it. We call it a nature preserve and not a recreation area. And that’s the problem we are having. People see it as a recreation area and they treat it as such without considerat­ion to the ecosystem, the plants and the wildlife.’’ GREG DECKER FRIENDS OF OSWEGATCHI­E HILLS NATURE PRESERVE

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